Clinical meaning
Antepartum complications encompass a range of pregnancy-related disorders that threaten maternal and fetal well-being before the onset of labor. Understanding the underlying pathophysiology of the three most critical antepartum emergencies -- placenta previa, placental abruption, and preeclampsia -- is essential for practical nurses who must recognize warning signs and initiate timely interventions within their scope of practice.
Placenta previa occurs when the placenta implants partially or completely over the internal cervical os rather than in the normal upper uterine segment. During normal implantation, the blastocyst embeds in the well-vascularized fundal region of the uterus where the endometrium (decidua) is thickest. In placenta previa, abnormal implantation in the lower uterine segment places the placenta directly over the cervix. As the lower uterine segment thins and stretches during the second and third trimesters, the placental villi are torn from the uterine wall, exposing the maternal blood sinuses at the implantation site. This results in painless, bright red vaginal bleeding that is the hallmark of placenta previa. The bleeding is painless because the placenta separates passively as the lower segment stretches -- there is no uterine muscle contraction or concealed hemorrhage causing pain. Risk factors include prior cesarean section (the scar disrupts normal endometrial vascularity), multiparity, advanced maternal age, prior placenta previa, multiple gestation, and tobacco use.
Placental abruption (abruptio placentae) is the premature separation of a normally implanted placenta from the uterine wall before delivery. The pathophysiology begins with rupture of maternal decidual arteries, creating a retroplacental hematoma (blood collection behind the placenta). As the hematoma expands, it further separates the placenta from the uterine wall, compromising the exchange surface area for oxygen and nutrient transfer to the fetus. Abruption can be classified as partial or complete, and as revealed (vaginal bleeding is visible) or concealed (blood is trapped behind the placenta with no external bleeding). Concealed abruption is particularly dangerous because the degree of hemorrhage is underestimated. In severe cases, blood infiltrates the myometrium (Couvelaire uterus), impairing uterine contractility and increasing the risk of postpartum hemorrhage. The massive release of thromboplastin from the damaged placental tissue can trigger disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), a life-threatening coagulopathy. Risk factors include chronic hypertension, preeclampsia, trauma to the abdomen, cocaine use, cigarette smoking, premature rupture of membranes, short umbilical cord, and prior abruption.
